Miso Hungry: Recovery Protein & Electrolyte Bowl

Ride strong, recover stronger

Physically and mentally drained after your sport, you walk through your door past your dog who’s furiously licking the sweat from your legs. You’re spent, but you know you have to muster the energy put together a post-workout recovery meal.

As the body loses electrolytes through sweat, you’ll feel symptoms like muscle cramps, fatigue, nausea, and mental confusion. And if you’re not replenishing with the right amount of carbs, electrolytes, fats, fluids and proteins you’ll experience increased muscle damage and free-radical buildup—Making you feel weaker and weaker with each sweat session.

Hard tail maintenance 101

Timing is critical. After you wash you bike (always step #1), drop your gear at the door and hit the kitchen! The time frame for consuming your recovery meal ranges between 45 minutes to an hour post-workout.

Portions are paramount. In order to rebuild your muscles and get ready for another bout of exercise, it it suggested you eat 0.2 to 0.4 grams of protein combined with 0.8 grams of carbohydrates for every 2.2 pounds you weigh, per hour you’ve exercised.

Ingredients are imperative. Your goal is to provide immediate fuel in order to prevent breakdown of muscle tissue. This recipe includes carbs from veggies and quinoa along with protein from chicken, quinoa and pea shoots. The carbs will help spare your body’s own energy source and the protein will help to repair muscle and encourage muscle growth.

Carbohydrates

Carbs are not bad, but they should be from healthy sources. For an athlete, quality carbohydrates provide the body and brain with fuel needed to perform. Our body stores carbohydrates as glycogen to be used during activity. As we exercise, we burn through our glycogen stores. The longer and the more intense the session, the more we use.

Protein

Protein is the nutrient that creates and repairs damaged muscle tissue. Protein helps you recover after training sessions by aiding the synthesis of muscle protein, a key process for building muscle.

Fluids & Electrolytes

If after exercise your dog is licking your legs, it’s probably because your skin tastes salty! That means you lost some minerals (electrolytes) such as sodium and potassium during your workout. These minerals along with fluids are needed to help the body function normally.

Nutritional Highlights

Miso – Miso contains a lot of sodium, 200-300 mg/teaspoon so it can also help restore electrolytes after a long workout.

Stimulates digestion and is high in fiber

Strengthens the immune system and can help fight infections

Contains probiotics for a healthy gut

Lowers LDL or “bad” cholesterol

Contains all nine essential amino acids, making it a complete protein

Contains antioxidants such as zinc, manganese and copper, which are known to increase energy levels

Quinoa – Essential nutrients for muscle recovery, one cup of quinoa delivers minerals, fiber, antioxidants, enzymes, all nine essential amino acids and nine grams of protein. Additionally, with its glycogen-restoring carbohydrates and energy-boosting iron, Quinoa is one of the most complete foods in nature .

Ginger – Ginger is among the healthiest and zestiest spices on the planet. A natural anti-inflammatory, it may reduce nausea, help with digestion, fight cancer and boost the immune system. For athletes, ginger can open up your airways, assist in weight-loss, improve circulation and strengthen your immune system.

Kale – For athletes, the iron in Kale will transport oxygen to various parts of the body. The Vitamin B6 in Kale will help maintain healthy nervous and immune systems.

Cilantro – Cilantro is one of the richest herbal sources for vitamin K; provide about 258% of daily recommended intake. Vitamin-K has a potential role in bone mass building. —recovery faster from injuries!

Pea Shoots – Peas are commonly being used as a base protein concentrate for many vegan protein powders and they contain between 20-25% protein (Move over popeye, I’m comin up). Pea shoots are also rich in protease inhibitors, these little dudes stop bacteria, viruses and fungi in their tracks. They also prevent certain viruses that promote cancer and are useful in reducing LDL (bad cholesterol) in the blood.